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Los Angeles

Gallery Luisotti

Exhibition Detail
Mount St. Helens
2525 Michigan Ave.
Bergamot Station: Gallery A-2
Santa Monica, CA 90404


March 17th, 2012 - May 5th, 2012
Opening: 
March 24th, 2012 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
 
Mount St. Helens: Aerial view: Mount St. Helens rim, crater, and lava dome,Frank GohlkeFrank Gohlke,
Mount St. Helens: Aerial view: Mount St. Helens rim, crater, and lava dome,
1982, Silver gelatin print, h: 20 x w: 24 in / h: 50.8 x w: 61 cm
© Courtesy of the Artist and Gallery Luisotti
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> DESCRIPTION

Gallery Luisotti is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition, Frank Gohlke: Mount St. Helens. Executed between 1981 and 1990, the Mount St. Helens cycle represents a key moment in Gohlke’s career. At once a break from the depiction of the ever-urbanized landscape of his New Topographic works of the 1970s, this series –in expansive detail- is an extension of the earlier work’s documentary practice. The gallery exhibition marks the first presentation of the series in Los Angeles and is the first since the 2005 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, curated by the late John Szarkowski.

On May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens, located in the Cascade Mountains of southeast Washington, erupted with the force equivalent to 1600 times the energy released by the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The initial blast decimated nearly 231 square miles of immediate land and an additional 22,000 acres of timber were damaged. Subsequent ash flows and gas exposure following the initial explosion rendered the landscape a barren waste. In 1981, Gohlke made his first trip to Mount St. Helens to document the aftermath of the eruption. It would be a visit that would eventually lead to four more returns in the next nine years, often with the intent of creating a time-lapsed narrative of a particular area captured during a previous trip. Though the series portrays attitudes of beauty in the way images of landscape and nature so readily infer, Mount St. Helens is a subtle refutation of this. Eschewing the dramatic beauty of a scene’s idealized moment, Gohlke’s decade-long work on Mount St. Helens is patterned in spirit to his other major bodies of work, most noticeably in that of his catalogic Grain Elevators series – repeated documentation, over time, reveals the extent of humanity’s impact on the landscape.

The timing of Mount St. Helens’ eruption, coinciding with the rise of cheaply available televisions globally, was apt: the disaster initiated the concept of catastrophic nature as a media event. For all its natural beauty, Mount St. Helens is humanist in intention, however dark. Like Edmund Burke’s notion of the Sublime, these works are manifestations of nature as seemingly opposing ideas in harmony, limning beauty, terror, and the uncontrollable all in one.

Frank Gohlke has exhibited in numerous solo exhibitions, including the Museum of Modern Art in 1975, 1983, 2005, Art Institute of Chicago, Center of Creative Photography, and elsewhere. His retrospective, Accommodating Nature: The Photographs of Frank Gohlke 1972-2005 was shown at the Amon Carter Museum, Center for Creative Photography, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. He is the recipient of two Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships, two grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Bush Foundation Artist’s Fellowship, and a number of commissions, including one from the Gund Foundation in 1997. A series of books on Gohlkes’s career is currently being planned for publication with Steidl Press.

For more information about the artist and the exhibition, or for a complete curriculum vitae of the artist, please contact Gallery Luisotti at (310) 453-0043 or by email at info@galleryluisotti.com


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